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   CONSPRCY      How big is your tinfoil hat?      2,445 messages   

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   Message 2,225 of 2,445   
   Mike Powell to All   
   More worrying tech supply   
   15 Jan 26 09:39:42   
   
   TZUTC: -0500   
   MSGID: 1983.consprcy@1:2320/105 2dce39ed   
   PID: Synchronet 3.21a-Linux master/123f2d28a Jul 12 2025 GCC 12.2.0   
   TID: SBBSecho 3.28-Linux master/123f2d28a Jul 12 2025 GCC 12.2.0   
   BBSID: CAPCITY2   
   CHRS: ASCII 1   
   FORMAT: flowed   
   More worrying tech supply chain news - no, it's not more RAM troubles, but   
   this vital material could be set to cause issues sooner than expected   
      
   Date:   
   Wed, 14 Jan 2026 21:45:00 +0000   
      
   Description:   
   Copper demand is rising fast due to electrification, data centers, and   
   renewable energy, while supply struggles and recycling cannot meet needs.   
      
   FULL STORY   
      
   Copper demand continues to rise as electrification expands across transport,   
   power generation, and industrial systems, experts have warned, with potential   
   shortages possibly not too far away.    
      
   Electric vehicles, grid upgrades, renewable energy installations, and data   
   center infrastructure all rely heavily on copper for wiring, motors, and   
   interconnects. Even components closely tied to a CPU and high-speed memory   
   subsystems rely on dense copper pathways at both board and facility levels.   
      
   Projected demand and supply gap   
      
   Analysts from S&P Global have estimated global demand could reach 42 million   
   metric tons by 2040, representing roughly a50% increase from current   
   consumption levels.    
      
   Production is expected to peak much earlier, with S&P Global projecting a   
   maximum output of about 33 million metric tons around 2030 - implying a   
   potential shortfall of close to 10 million metric tons if current trends   
   remain unchanged.    
      
   Primary copper mining faces declining ore grades, rising costs, and   
   increasingly complex extraction.    
      
   Bringing new mines into use also involves long timescales, averaging 17    
   years. These delays limit how quickly supply can respond to rising demand,   
   even when prices signal scarcity.    
      
   Another recent report from PricewaterhouseCoopers suggested climate change   
   threatens copper mines, which require steady water supplies but often operate   
   in drought-risk regions.    
      
   Environmental stress, regulatory hurdles, and capital intensity combine to   
   slow the expansion of new production capacity, and secondary supply from   
   recycled sources cannot close the gap, according to S&P analysis.    
      
   While telcos transitioning to fiber-optic cabling may free up 800,000 metric   
   tons of copper wiring, the contribution remains limited. Recycling is expected   
   to account for only about one-third of the total supply by 2040, even under   
   optimistic collection assumptions.   
      
   China holds between 40 and 50% of global copper smelting and refining   
   capacity, creating vulnerabilities tied to geographic concentration.    
      
   This concentration amplifies systemic risks across industries dependent on   
   electrical infrastructure, from power grids to servers built around DDR5   
   memory channels. Analysts warn this concentration increases exposure to   
   geopolitical shocks and broader supply disruptions.   
      
   Similar concerns have previously emerged around rare earth minerals and    
   legacy semiconductor manufacturing.    
      
   S&P highlights the need to expand processing capacity beyond existing hubs to   
   reduce dependency on a narrow set of regions.    
      
   Some technology leaders, including the Broadcom CEO, say silicon photonics,   
   which uses light instead of copper for connections, will not see widespread   
   use anytime soon.    
      
   Others point out that GPUs remain expensive but still rely heavily on copper   
   for wiring, cooling, and power, so demand for copper stays high.    
      
   Nvidia-backed photonics startup Ayar Labs targets hyperscale customers with   
   GUC design collaboration, yet these efforts still depend on physical   
   infrastructure that remains copper-intensive.    
      
   Primary production remains the only practical path to closing the gap, S&P   
   concludes.    
      
   The scale of projected demand growth suggests that without faster permitting,   
   broader investment, and genuine multilateral cooperation, copper constraints   
   are likely to persist.    
      
   ======================================================================   
   Link to news story:   
   https://www.techradar.com/pro/finally-some-good-supply-chain-news-no-its-not-m   
   ore-ram-but-this-vital-material-is-set-to-enjoy-a-boom-year-which-should-be-gr   
   eat-news-for-everyone   
      
   $$   
   --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux   
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